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File:Mudang performing a ritual placating the angry spirits of the dead.png

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Mudang_performing_a_ritual_placating_the_angry_spirits_of_the_dead.png(448 × 310 pixels, file size: 325 KB, MIME type: image/png)

Summary

Description

A mudang (Korean female shaman) holding a ritual (gut) to placate the angry spirits of the dead preventing them from haunting the lives of her clients.

A depiction of Odin riding Sleipnir from an 18th-century Icelandic manuscript.
Note: Studying Korean shamanism (Muism) and mythology you may notice the many similarities it has with other Eurasian religions and the Germanic traditional religions (for example the triune conception of God—Haneullim—manifest in Hwanin, Hwanung and Dangun, corresponding to Wotan, Thor and Ing-Frey; but also the etymological connection Dangun•Tangur—Tengri—Tonger•Thunor•Thor). In the photo above, the god represented on the cloth to the left of the priestess (right of the viewer) has striking resemblance to depictions of Wotan.
Date
Source splashman.phoenix.wikispaces.net - Shintoism & Shaminism
Author hplouffe
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19 August 2010

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current12:06, 12 April 2014Thumbnail for version as of 12:06, 12 April 2014448 × 310 (325 KB)Æo== {{int:filedesc}} == {{Information |Description=A ''mudang'' (Korean female shaman) holding a ritual (''gut'') to placate the angry spirits of the dead preventing them from haunting the lives of her clients. '''Note:''' Studying Korean shamanism (Mu...
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